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posted by Snow on Tuesday December 13 2016, @01:27AM   Printer-friendly
from the pink-holes-have-more-fun dept.

It took almost 100 years for the boldest of Einstein's General Relativity (GR) predictions, namely gravitational waves, to be experimentally observed. Now, that LIGO data is letting physicists probe where GR breaks down. It has long been thought that GR breaks down at extreme space-time curvatures, such as in the interior of black holes. The problem is that, by conventional wisdom, the interior of black holes are inaccessible because anything inside of the event horizon cannot escape out; however, other than being defined by the distance from the center of the black hole, there is nothing special about the event horizon and any unfortunate being who crosses through one would not notice anything being there.

In 2012 researchers realized that if quantum mechanics (QM) is correct, the black hole should be surrounded by a "firewall" of high energy particles. The paradox is that this isn't consistent with GR, but if there is no firewall, this is inconsistent with QM. When the LIGO data were released, VĂ­tor Cardoso and colleagues from Lisbon argued that if a firewall does exist, then when two black holes merge, you should see echoes in the gravitational waves.

The Nature article notes:

The echoes arise because a firewall or any other kind of structure would effectively create a smeared-out region at the traditional event horizon. The inner edge of this region is the conventional event horizon, the boundary beyond which no light particles, or photons, can escape. The outer edge is more porous: a typical photon that crosses this boundary will be trapped by the black hole, but some will be able to escape, depending on their angle of approach. The effect would also partly trap gravitational waves released by the black-hole merger. They would bounce back and forth between the inner and outer edge with some escaping each time.


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  • (Score: 3, Informative) by stormwyrm on Tuesday December 13 2016, @04:36PM

    by stormwyrm (717) on Tuesday December 13 2016, @04:36PM (#440837) Journal

    Gravitational waves also have to travel along light-like geodesics just like electromagnetic radiation:

    http://physics.stackexchange.com/questions/132940/do-gravitational-waves-travel-on-geodesics-in-gr-if-yes-why [stackexchange.com]

    Thus a gravitational wave passing through the event horizon of a black hole would also never find its way out again as all geodesics beyond the event horizon bend to the singularity.

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